Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Silent film about a lord who tries to interfere with a lady's horse. Desert Gold: 1919 Australian film starring the famous racehorse Desert Gold: A Dead Certainty [4] 1920 A British film about a rider pressured to fix a race. The Sport of Kings [5] 1921 A man (Victor McLaglen) looks out for his young ward and her racehorse. The Kentucky Derby ...
New performance and trim packages for both models included the "kit car" and the "Super Coupe", which combined performance trim with the 360 cu in (5.9 L) V8, but the six-cylinder engine was standard. The Volaré or Aspen "kit car", made in honor of NASCAR legend Richard Petty, was supposed to look as much like a race car as possible. The ...
Later, they borrow an envelope of money from the Mob, who expect them to pay back within a week. They find out that the man who gave them the tip is a fraud, but Dooley remembers someone saying that the horse will run fast if he sees red, so he runs out to the track, waving a red dress, and the horse wins the race.
Racing Luck (1935) Racing Stripes (2005) [1] The Rainbow Jacket (1954) Ready to Run (2000) A Reckless Gamble (1928) Red Canyon (1949) The Red Horses (1950) The Red Horses (1954) The Red Pony (1949) [1] The Red Pony (1973) The Red Stallion (1947) Red Stallion in the Rockies (1949) The Reivers (1969) The Return of October (1948) Ride a Wild Pony ...
In 1999, The Wild Ride was re-edited with new footage that makes the original film a long flashback sequence. Running 88 minutes and titled Velocity, the new scenes feature Jack Nicholson impersonator Joe Richards playing an older version of the character originally played by Nicholson, as well as performances by Jorge Garcia, Jason Sudeikis, and Dick Miller.
King of the Mountain is a 1981 American action drama film starring Harry Hamlin, Joseph Bottoms, Deborah Van Valkenburgh, Richard Cox, Seymour Cassel and Dennis Hopper about a group that race their cars up and down Mulholland Drive for both money and prestige.
On arrival, she finds out Freddie will be unable to run (or do anything else for that matter), so she buys a decrepit car and looks for a pilot, just as Eddie is looking for a car to drive. After he demonstrates his nerve-racking driving capabilities and the poor condition of the car, he suggests J.J. interview Count Borgia while he steals an ...
It was rethought after Romero's experience working on racing documentaries. [5] Romero has claimed the medieval hobbyist organization, the Society for Creative Anachronism, to be one inspiration for the film. [6] It was the first of three films financed and released through United Film Distribution. [4]